Nestle Earnings: Real Internal Growth Ahead While Top-Line Guidance Looks Conservative

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Securities In This Article
Nestle SA
(NESN)
Nestle SA ADR
(NSRGY)

Nestle NSRGY reported first-quarter results that included strong organic growth of 9.3% (real internal growth, or RIG, of negative 0.5% and pricing up 9.8%), ahead of company-compiled consensus estimates of 7.2%, driven predominantly by better-than-expected RIG (down 2% expected). From a regional perspective, RIG (volume and mix effect) stood well in Asia, Oceania, and Africa (up 1.3%) and Latin America (down 0.6%), with Europe, North America, and China down 1%, 0.8%, and 0.8%, respectively. At the product category/business level, along with water this quarter, prepared dishes and cooking aids as well as milk products and ice cream continued to exhibit the weakest RIG, down 7.3%, 4.3%, and 3.7%, respectively. We reiterate our view that despite some weak RIG numbers in noncore categories and close to 10% pricing contribution, flat to slightly negative RIG at the group level is a best-in-class performance in fast-moving consumer goods, driven by continued resilient performance from core categories (petcare, nutrition, coffee).

Nestle confirmed organic growth guidance of 6%-8% and cautious guidance on margins at 17%-17.5%. We believe that if Nestle can carry this first-quarter momentum into the second quarter, organic growth guidance for fiscal 2023 might need to be raised with the first-half release. This was a strong all-around print for the first quarter, with management defending weak Nespresso RIG numbers (down 1.1%) by pointing to the mid-single-digit organic growth coming from the Nespresso ecosystem, part of which is reported under the powdered and liquids category. We maintain our CHF 109/$113 fair value estimate and wide moat rating. We plan to increase our organic growth forecast for 2023 and maintain our margin forecast (17.2%, within guidance) to reflect upbeat organic growth guidance, but we don’t expect a material change to our fair value estimate as a result of these changes. The shares appear fairly valued.

The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.

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Ioannis Pontikis, CFA

Director of Equity Research in Europe
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Ioannis Pontikis, CFA, is a Director of Equity Research in Europe for Morningstar*. He covers European grocers and global food and beverage companies like Tesco, Unilever, Nestle, and Danone, and manages a team of eight analysts across the Financials and Consumer sectors. He also leads Morningstar’s Equity Research Valuation Committee, advancing the firm's valuation methodology through projects such as developing new methodologies, refining our valuation model, and enhancing the efficacy of our ratings.

Before joining Morningstar in 2017, Pontikis spent six years on the buy-side, co-managing a $100M long/short equity fund and leading teams in applying machine learning to stock and equity factor selection models. He developed the fund's valuation and risk assessment framework, achieving strong risk-adjusted performance. Prior to this, Pontikis worked at Nestle S.A. in Athens, focusing on financial reporting, budgeting, and auditing proposals to improve processes.

Pontikis research has appeared in numerous media outlets including Bloomberg, CNBC, Reuters, Guardian, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung among others.

Pontikis holds a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Piraeus’s and a master’s degree in accounting and finance from the London School of Economics. He also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation and studying towards an advanced post-masters degree in portfolio and risk management.

* Morningstar Holland BV (“Morningstar”) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc

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